According to Elephant News, recently, a female internet anchor named Jiaxin (pseudonym) from Yinchuan, Ningxia appealed to the media for help. She said that two years ago, a big brother came to her live streaming room. Within a week, he gave her more than 30,000 gifts. Before the money in her pocket had warmed up, she was “borrowed” 74,000 yuan by the big brother and it has not been repaid until now.
Jiaxin pulled the reporter into a WeChat group named “Ex-girlfriend Group of Liu Mouxin”. It was found that there were six women in the group who all claimed to be victims who were “borrowed money” by Liu Mouxin in similar ways. The amount ranged from 20,000 to more than 100,000 yuan. Jiaxin frankly told the media that in the anchor industry, it is not easy to meet a big brother who is good to her, so she also cherishes the big brother very much. After adding the big brother’s WeChat, the other party began to draw big pies for her, praise his own “strength”, and even proposed to keep the woman and advised her not to live stream anymore. After chatting for a while, the “big brother” said that he needed funds for business turnover, so he borrowed money from the anchor. After the money was transferred, he could no longer be contacted, and his WeChat was also blocked. Lawyers said that the dispute in this case involves private lending disputes. The female anchor involved in the case has reached a repayment agreement on the dispute with the man through resources. Informal agreements formed by communicating repayment matters through WeChat or phone calls need to comprehensively determine the borrowing facts of both parties by combining evidence such as transfer vouchers, WeChat chat records, and recordings. The female anchor needs to file a lawsuit in court on her own and take civil remedies.